Thursday, October 28, 2004

Hello. I'm an Ocicat. We Ocicats are agouti spotted cats originating from interbreeding of Abyssinian, Siamese and American Shorthair kitties.

Isn't it cute how my cat bed coordinates with my fur?

Hello. I'm an Egyptian Mau. Mau is egyptian for cat. We Mau cats are the only natural spotted breed of domestic cat.

Hello. I'm an Exotic. I'm basically a Persian with short fur. When I enter cat shows, I am judged against all the same standards as Persians, with one obvious exception.

Hello. I'm a Sphynx. Yes, I know what you are thinking. You are thinking that I look funny without fur. Well you'd look pretty funny without fur too! I not actually completely hairless. I have a very fine layer of down, so patting me is like patting a warm peach.

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Hello. I'm a Turkish Angora kitty. We Turkish Angoras have lovely fluffly tails and can trace our ancestry back to cats in Turkey.

Hello. I'm a tortoiseshell American Shorthair kitty.

Miaow. Purr. These pats are pretty good.I'm also an American Shorthair. I'm what's called 'pet quality' rather than 'show quality'. I think it's because my nose isn't squishy enough. As long as I get pats I don't really care.

I'm a British Shorthair and I'm having a snooze.

Hello. I'm a Japanese Bobtail kitty. The name of my breed is rather apt as my breed originates from Japan and members of my breed have bobtails. You can't see my little bobtail in this picture because of the angle so you'll just have to believe me. Miaow.

Hello. I'm also a Japanese Bobtail kitty and I'm also sitting at the wrong angle for you to see my little bobtail. Oh well.

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Hello. I'm an Abyssinian kitty, a ruddy Abyssinian actually. I'm just hanging out here with my blue Abyssinian pals (see picture below). They look grey to me, but people tell us that their coat colour is called blue.

Needless to say, I took many photos. I'm going to post them here over the next few days.

You may be wondering if these kitties were sad and bored hanging out in the cat cages during the competition. I don't think they were. Many of them slept a lot, which is probably what they would have been doing at home anyway. They were frequently out and about with their people while going to the various show rings for judging, or being groomed by their people or posing for photographs. These show kitties were all incredibly well-behaved. Certainly more so than any kitty who's ever lived with me!

This is an American Curl kitty. The primary distinguishing feature of this breed is that the kitty's ears curl backwards. This unusual breed began purely by chance back in June 1981 when a cute little curl-eared stray turned up on the doorstep of Joe and Grace Ruga in Lakewood, California. All bona fide American Curls can trace their lineage back to this one kitty. The autosomal dominant ear-curling gene does not affect the kitty's hearing or any other aspect of the kitty's health. It just makes their ears curl backwards.

In the bottom left of this photo you can see that someone is holding out a feather to the kitty. There are very few things more exciting to a kitty than chasing a feather on a stick. American Curls are born with straight ears. After 3-5 days the ears curl back in a tight rosebud poition and then gradually unfurl until about 16 weeks.

This is a Bombay kitty. If the kitty had been looking at the camera at the time, you would see that this kitty has lovely copper eyes. The Bombay breed originated from a crossing between black American Shorthair male with copper eyes and a sable Burmese female.

Sunday, October 17, 2004

Saturday, October 16, 2004

It's always interesting to see the search terms through which visitors find your site.

Most of my posts in this blog are about cats and Rubik's cubes. Based on this you might expect that when people find my site via search engines, it's with search terms that relate to these topics. This is not the case.

Last month I wrote a blog entry about Magical Trevor. It appears that Magical Trevor is very popular and has been using his magic to increase the hits to my blog.

Thursday, October 14, 2004

The $US990 gift certificate entitles the recipient to have the DNA of their cat or dog frozen and stored in GSC's PetBank, ready for cloning at some later point. Note that, at this stage, GSC are only cloning cats. They hope to be cloning dogs by 2005. Apparently dogs are more difficult to clone . Also, the actual cloning will cost significantly more than $990 (currently price tag is $US50,000).

GSC have successfully cloned three cats - CC, Tabouli and Baba Ganoush. Tabouli and Baba are both clones of Tahini, the cat who lives with the GSC CEO's family.

This is CC, the world's first cloned cat

Here are Tabouli and Baba Ganoush, the second and third cloned kitties.

I was lucky enough to meet the Tabouli and Baba at the New York Cat Show last weekend. This was the kittens' first public appearance. They are totally adorable, so adorable that they deserve a separate blog entry! Stay tuned.

The writer and director of the film, Brad Bird, was interviewed after the screening. I discovered that he did the voice for the character Edna Mode, one of my favourite characters in the film. Not surprisingly, during the audience Q&A session someone asked him to do the Edna voice. It was very funny.

As the film is yet to be officially released, I won't spoil it by telling you stuff. You can read a brief plot outline on IMDB in you want to know more. All I'll say is that it's very funny and you should all go see it!

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

Went to a very nice place called Alice's Tea Cup last weekend. They had lots of exciting sounding tea, which is great because I love tea. I tried black fruits tea (black Indian tea flavored with black currants, black berries, and blueberries) and Peter had chocolate mint tea (black Indian black tea with mini chocolate chips and peppermint leaves).

Monday, October 11, 2004

Peter and I went to Quiznos the other day to buy sandwiches. While waiting in line Peter pointed out a sign which said “add bacon to any sub for an extra 99c”. I hadn’t been thinking about bacon when I walked into the shop, but after seeing the sign I thought “yeah, I do want bacon on my sub”.

I ordered the sub and asked for bacon to be added. I noticed that the person who started making the sandwich did not put bacon on. I assumed that she just hadn’t heard me, so I spoke up and again asked for bacon. She looked at me and then ignored my request and handed the sub off the person who puts the salad on.

I asked the salad guy for bacon and he stared at me blankly and then added lettuce. I like lettuce. I think it’s a good addition to any sandwich, but I still wanted bacon. So I asked again, “excuse me, could I please have bacon on my sub”. Again he started at me blankly. So again I asked for bacon. He continued to stare at me like he had no idea what I was talking about. I told him that there was a sign on the counter advertising that bacon could be added to any sub for a small extra charge. He pretty much didn’t believe me and seemed to be saying that I could not have bacon on my sub.

I felt like saying “do you know the meaning of customer service??” But instead I again pointed out the bacon advert on the counter. He still wouldn’t put bacon on my sandwich. By this point I was quite annoyed and decided that I wasn’t leaving until they added bacon to my sandwich!

It wasn’t that they didn’t have bacon. If this had been the case and they’d said “I’m sorry but we’ve run out of bacon today” then I wouldn’t have worried about it. If the person making the sandwich was a trainee and didn’t know if they were allowed to add bacon to the sandwich and said they needed to check with someone else – this would also have been fine. But instead they’d just stare at me blankly and ignore me (as if I’d asked for hippopotamus to be added to the sandwich!), or they'd tell me that I can’t have bacon.

Even if they didn’t have a bacon advertisement, how complicated can it be? If you’re running a sandwich shop and a customer asks if they could please have a particular topping on their sandwich, how is it good business sense to refuse? Especially if I was happy to pay extra for it. If they’d just given me the sandwich I’d asked for, then I’d probably go back there many times and buy many more sandwiches in the future, but now I’m never going back. There are plenty of places around here that make good sandwiches and have significantly better customer service!

The boy lion woke up long enough to move from one patch
of grass to another. These lions are pretty relaxed. I guess
it's easy to be so relaxed when you're the king of the jungle.

Note the squirrel in the foreground of this picture.
As you can see, the little squirrel is fearlessly collecting nuts
(or whatever it is that squirrels collect) in the lions den.
This squirrel is saying "danger? haha! I laugh in the face of danger!"
Actually, he's probably saying "yeah, right, and they call you
the king of the jungle! Whatever!"